Post by london777 on May 22, 2017 1:21:55 GMT
The issue I have with this "non judgmental" trend is that I firmly believe art, truly great art, should in some shape or form benefit society, not simply present it "as is." When society celebrates stories of moral relativism, it adopts moral relativism. Things that were, and for good reason, seen as clearly wrong, suddenly become "complex," up for personal interpretation, depending on "circumstance." And if challenged, the excuse is always "oh I'm not endorsing this, I'm just portraying real life without judging. This is what people do."
But when art abandons teaching moral messages, that contributes to society becoming morally anchorless and losing its scope of what's right or wrong. No, this definitely is not an argument about "violent movies influence violence in real life" or anything of the sort - it's not about what is portrayed, but how it is portrayed. And morality seems to have been sacrificed by many filmmakers on the altar of realism, with both public and critical acclaim embracing this with both arms.
I just want to pick up on a detail for now. You only specifically mention one film, "Manchester by the Sea". I find this a surprising choice to illustrate your argument. I cannot remember any ambiguity or disputes in that film about what was right or wrong. The film was murky psychologically, but not morally, as far as I can remember. I expect to be watching it again fairly soon, so I would appreciate your advice as to what to look out for.

